Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
INCOME-TAX OFFICER, AWARD, SITAPUR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MURLITDHAR BHAGWANDAS, LAKHIMPUR KHERI
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/01/1964
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 342 1964 SCR (6) 411
CITATOR INFO :
F 1968 SC 139 (2)
F 1969 SC 340 (1,2)
RF 1970 SC 486 (3)
RF 1971 SC 147 (14,15)
R 1972 SC 83 (12)
F 1973 SC2359 (5,7)
F 1973 SC2434 (7)
R 1973 SC2585 (13)
E 1979 SC1933 (11,12)
F 1980 SC 98 (14)
RF 1981 SC1759 (23)
E 1984 SC 993 (12,14,15,16,19,20,21,26,27)
ACT:
Income Tax-Assessment or reassessment made under order or
direction from higher authority must relate to the
assessment of the year under review-Meaning of "finding",
"direction" and "any person"--Decision of Income-tax officer
for a particular year not res judicata for subsequent year-
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (11 of 1922), s. 34(3), proviso-
Meaning and scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent was a firm carrying on business in different
lines. It was assessed to income-tax under s. 23(4) of the
Income-tax Act, 1922 for the assessment year 1949-50 on the
ground that notices issued under s. 22(2) and (4) had
not been complied with. Later on, that assessment
412
was cancelled. However, before the cancellation, it was
found that an interest income of Rs. 88,737 in the shape of
U.P. Encumbered Estates Act Bonds received by the respondent
from third parties had escaped assessment as the assessee
failed to disclose the same. The Income-tax Officer issued
a notice for the assessment year 1949-50 on the ground that
a sum of Rs. 88,737 had escaped assessment in the said
assessment year. After the cancellation of the assessment
made under s. 23(4), the Income-tax officer, ignoring the
notice issued by him under s. 34(1)(a), included that amount
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in the fresh assessment made by him for the year 1949-50.The
respondent appealed to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
who ordered the deletion of the sum of Rs. 88,737 from the
assessment for the year 1949-50 and directed the same to be
included in the assesment for the year ending 1948-49.
Pursuant to the direction given, the Income-tax Officer
served a notice on the respondent under s. 34(1). Against
that notice the assessee filed a writ petition in the High
Court for quashing the above-mentioned proceeding on the
ground that these were initiated beyond the time prescribed
by a. 34. The High Court accepted the petition and quashed
the notice on the ground that it was issued by the appellant
beyond the ordinary period of limitation It also overruled
the contention of the appellant that no period of limitation
governed the notice in as much as the second proviso to s.
34(3) was attracted to the facts of the case. The only
direction which the Appellate Assistant Commissioner could
give was one which was covered by s. 31 of the Act and as
the appeal before him was confined to a particular
assessment year, the direction must necessarily be limited
to a matter falling within that year. if the direction be
treated as based on a finding recorded by Appellate
Assistant Commissioner, that finding would have to be
disregarded when applying the proviso. The appellant came
to this Court by special leave.
Held: (per B. P. Sinha, C.J., K. Subba Rao and N.
Rajagopala Ayyangar JJ.). The proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34
of the Indian Incometax Act, 1922 does not save the time
limit prescribed under sub-s. (1) of s. 34 in respect of an
escaped assessment of a year other than that which is the
subject matter of appeal or revision as the case may be and
hence the notice under s. 34(1)(a) issued in the present
case was clearly barred by time.
The jurisdiction of the High Court or the Supreme Court
under s. 66 or s. 66(b) is a limited one and is confined
only to the questions referred to them. Moreover, the
questions referred by Tribunal cannot exceed its
jurisdiction. Therefore the assessment or reassessment made
under the said sections or Pursuant to the orders or
directions made thereunder must necessarily relate to the
assessment of the year under review, revision or appeal as
the case may be. ’Me proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34 does
not confer any fresh power upon the Income-tax Officer to
make assessment in respect of the escaped incomes without
any time limit. It only lifts the ban of limitation in
respect of certain assessments made under certain provisions
of the Act and the lifting of the ban cannot be so construed
as to increase the jurisdiction of the tribunal Under the
413
relevant sections. The lifting of the ban was only to give
effect to the orders that may be made by the appellate,
revisional or reviewing Tribunal within the scope of its
jurisdiction. If the intention was to remove the period of
limitation in respect of any assessment against any person,
the proviso would not have been added as proviso to sub-s.
(3) which deals with completion of an assessment but would
have been added to sub-s. (1) of s. 34.
The word ’finding’ covers only the material questions which
arise in a particular case for decision by the authority
hearing the. case or the appeal which, being necessary for
passing the final order or giving the final decision in the
appeal, has been the subject of controversy between the
interested parties or on which the parties concerned have
been given a hearing. The expression ’direction’ refers to
a direction which the appellate or revisional authority is
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empowered to give under the law. The expression "any
person" must be confined to a person intimately connected
with the assessment of the year under appeal or revision.
Held: per Raghubar Dayal and J. R. Mudholkar JJ.
(dissenting): That the notice was not in contravention of
the provisions of s. 34 and hence could not be quashed on
that ground. When an appeal is before an appellate
authority, the whole matter is at large before it and there-
fore when a specific case is put before it by an assessee,
it has both the power as well as the duty to give its
finding thereon. The ground given by an assessee for
claiming a reduction or annulment of assessment may be that
the income upon which he had been assessed was not earned in
the accounting period of the year to which the assessment
pertained but in respect of a specified earlier or later
year. The appellate authority is entitled to go into the
whole question and come to a finding one way or the other.
The finding of a tribunal is its conclusion on a point
agitated before it and for a conclusion to amount to a
finding, it is not necessary that it should be the final and
ultimate conclusion.
The contention of respondent that the second proviso to a.
34(3) enabling a notice to issue only to assessee in respect
of escaped income without limit of time on the ground that
the appellate authority has made a finding or direction in
the proceeding before it makes a discrimination against such
assessee because it does not lift the bar of limitation with
regard to other assessees similarly situated but with regard
to whom no finding has been made or direction given by
appellate authority, was rejected. It was held that prima
facie, there was a reasonable basis for the classification.
The ground on which classification was made had a rational
relationship with the object which was intended to be
achieved by law, ie., to detect and bring to assessment the
escaped income.
Commissioner of Income-tax v. S. M. Chitnavis, (1932) L.R.
59 I.A. 290, Sir Kikabhai Premchand v. Commissioner of
Income-tax (Central), Bombay, [1954] S.C.R. 219. pt. Hazart
Lal v. Income-tax Officer, Kanpur. (1960) 39 LT.R 26S.
Lakshman Prakash v. Commissioner of Income-
414
tax, U.P., (1963) 48 I.L R 705, A. S. Khader Ismail v.
Income-tax Officer, Salem, (1963)48 I.T.R. 16, Simrathmul v.
Additional Income-tax Officer, Ootachamund, (1959)36 I.T.R.
41, Brindaban Chandra Basak v. Incometax Officer, (1962) 46
I.T.R. 14, K. C. Thomas, First Income-tax Officer. Bombay v.
Vasant Hira Lal Shah [1964] 6 S.C.R. 431, Prashar & Anr. V.
Sasantsen Dwarkadas 49 I.T.R. (S.C.) 1, Kamlapat Hotilal v.
Income-tax Officer, 29 I.T.R. 192, Hiralal Amrit Lal Shah v.
K. C. Thomas, Income-tax Officer, Bombay, 34 I.T.R. 446,
General Construction and Supply Co. v. Income-tax Officer
(8th) C Ward, Bombay, 44 I.T.R. 16, Suraj Mal Mohata & Co.
v. A. V. Visvanatha Sastri [1955] 1 S.C.R. 448, A. Thangal
Kunju Mudaliar v. M. Venkatachalam Potti & Anr. [1955] 2
S.C.R. 1196 and Palaji v. Income-tax Officer, Special
Investigation Circle [1962] 2 S.C.R. 983, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 130 of 1962.
Appeal by special leave from the Judgment and decree dated
March 17, 1959, of the Allahabad High Court in Misc. Writ
Petition No. 280 of 1958.
K. N. Rajagopal Sastri and R. N. Sachthey, for the
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appellant Bishan Narain, G. C. Sharma, O.C. Mathur, J. B.
Dadachanji and Ravinder Narain, for the respondent.
A. V. Vishwanatha Sastri, D. N. Mukherjee and B. N. Ghosh,
for the intervener.
January 29, 1964. ’Me Judgment of B. P. Sinha C.J., K.Subba
Rao and N. Rajagopala Ayyangar JJ., was delivered by Subba
Rao J. The dissenting opinion of Raghubar Dayal and
Mudholkar JJ., was delivered by Mudholkar J.
SUBBA RAo J.-This appeal by special leave raises the
question of the construction of the proviso to sub-s. (3) of
s. 34 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, as amended by Act
25 of 1933, hereinafter called the Act.
The facts lie in a small compass and they are as follows:
The respondent is a firm carrying on business in different
lines. It was assessed to income-tax under s. 23 (4) of the
Act for the assessment year 1949-50 on the ground that the
notice issued under sub-ss. (2) and (4) of s. 22 of the Act
had not been complied with. On September 27, 1955, the said
assessment was cancelled under s. 27 of the Act. But before
the said cancellation, it was found that an interest income
of Rs. 88,737 in the shape of U.P. Encumbered Estates Act
Bonds received by him in discharge of
415
the debts due from third parties had escaped assessment as
the assessee failed to disclose the same. The Income-tax
Officer issued a notice under s. 34 (1) (a) of the Act for
the assessment year 1949-50 on the ground that the said sum
of Rs. 88,737 had escaped assessment in the said assessment
year. After the assessment of that year was set aside under
s. 27 of the Act, the Income-tax Officer, ignoring the
notice issued by him under s. 34 (1)(a) of the Act, included
that amount in the fresh assessment made by him. The
assessee preferred an appeal against that order and that was
disposed of by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner on
December 4, 1957. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner in
his order held that the bonds were received by the assessee
in the previous accounting year and, therefore, directed
that the sum representing interest on the bonds should be,
deleted from the assessment for the year ending 1949-50 and
included in the --assessment for the year ending 1948-49.
pursuant to the direction given by the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner the Income-tax Officer initiated proceedings
under s. 34(1) of the Act in respect of the assessment year
1948-49. The notice issued under that section was served on
the respondent on December 5, 1957. The assessee filed a
petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution in the High
Court of Judicature at Allahabad for quashing the said
proceedings, mainly on the ground that the proceedings were
initiated beyond the time prescribed by s. 34 of the Act.
The High Court accepted the contention and quashed the
proceedings initiated by the Income-tax Officer. Hence the
appeal.
The proceedings would be in time, if the second proviso to
s. 34(3) of the Act could be invoked. The question,
therefore, is what is the true meaning of the terms of the
second proviso to s. 34(3) of the Act,. It reads:
"Provided further that nothing in this section
limiting the time within which any action may
be taken, or any order, assessment or re-
assessment may be made, shall apply to a re-
assessment made under s. 27 or to an
assessment or re-assessment made on the
assessee or any person in consequence of or to
give effect to any
416
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finding or direction contained in an order
under S. 31, s. 33, s. 33A, s. 33B. s. 66 or
s. 66A."
Prima facie this proviso lifts the ban of limitation imposed
by the other provisions of the section in the matter of
taking an action in respect of or making an order of
assessment or re-assessment falling within the scope of the
said proviso. The scope of the proviso is confined to an
assessment or re-assessment made on the assessee or any
person in consequence of an order to give effect to any
finding or direction contained in any order made under s. 31
i.e., in an appeal before the Assistant Appellate
Commissioner, under s. 33 i.e., in an appeal before the
Tribunal, under s. 33A i.e., in a revision before the
Commissioner, under s. 33B i.e.. in a revision before the
Commissioner against an order of the Income-tax Officer, and
under ss. 66 and 66A i.e., in a reference to the High Court
and appeal against the High Court’s order to the Supreme
Court. Learned counsel for the appellant contends that the
scope of the proviso is only confined to the assessment of
the year that is the subject matter of the appeal or the
revision, as the case may be. Learned counsel for the
Department argues that the comprehensive phraseology used in
the proviso takes in its broad sweep any finding given by
the appropriate authority necessary for the disposal of the
appeal or the revision, as the case may be, and to any
direction given by the said authority to effectuate its
finding and that the said finding or direction may be in
respect of any year or any person. As the phraseology used
in the proviso is not clear or unambiguous, the question
raised cannot be satisfactorily resolved without having a
precise appreciation of a brief history of s. 34 of the Act
culminating in the enactment of the proviso in the present
form.
Under s. 3 of the Act, income-tax for any year shall be
charged in respect of the total income of the previous year
of every assessee. Notice under s. 22 calling for return of
income is the first step in the assessment proceedings. Two
types of notices are mentioned in that section, namely, (i)
the public notice and (ii) the individual notice. ’Me
public notice shall be, issued on or before the 1st May of
each year and the individual notice may be issued at any
417
time in the course of the assessment year. Income-tax
proceedings, therefore, for a particular assessment year
have to be initiated in the course of that year. But there
may be cases of escaped assessment or under-assessment.
Section 34 empowers the Income-tax Officer to take
proceedings under that section both in respect of concealed
income and also in bona fide cases where the income has
escaped assessment or full assessment. Section 34(1) (a)
provides for the initiation of assessment proceedings in
respect of concealed income and s. 34(1) (b) for other
escaped income, Section 34(1) has been amended from time to
time. Under the said section, as it originally stood, the
Income-tax Officer was empowered to initiate proceedings at
any time within one year of the end of the year in respect
whereof the income escaped assessment. By Act 7 of 1939
that section was amended and eight years’ limitation from
the end of the year was prescribed in respect of concealed
income and a limitation of four years for other escaped
income. Under Act 48 of 1948, the same periods of
limitation were retained, but certain conditions were
imposed. By the Finance Act of 1956, it was enacted that in
the case of concealed income the proceedings could be
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initiated at any time within 4 years of the end of the
relevant assessment year. Though no period of limitation
was prescribed in respect of concealed income, three
conditions were imposed, namely, (i) that an Income-tax
Officer shall not issue a notice for any year prior to the
year ending on March 31, 1941, (ii) that if the escaped
income was less than rupees one lakh, he shall not issue a
notice if 8 years have elapsed after the expiry of the
relevant assessment year, and (iii) that unless he has
recorded his reasons and unless the Central Board of Revenue
in any case falling under cl. (2) of the proviso and in any
other case, the Commissioner, is satisfied that for such
reasons as recorded it is a fit case for the issue of a
notice.
Before 1939, there was no period of limitation for com-
pleting the assessment once it had been initiated within the
prescribed period of limitation. But Act 7 of 1939 for the
first time introduced cl. (2) in s. 34 whereunder "no order
of assessment under s. 23 or of assessment or re-assessment
under sub-section (1) of this section shall be made after
the
134-159 S. C. 27
418
expiry, in any case to which (c) of sub-section (1) of sec-
tion 28 applies, of eight years, and in any other case, of
four years from the end of the year in which the income,
profits or gains were first assessable". Section 28 (1) (c)
dealt with a case of an assessee concealing the particulars
of his income or deliberately furnishing inaccurate
particulars of his income. Act 23 of 1941 inserted a
proviso in s. 34(2) providing that "nothing contained in
this sub-section shall apply to a re-assessment made in
pursuance of an order under section 31, section 33, section
66 or section 66-A", i.e., provisions relating to appeals,
revisions and references: that is to say, if the assessment
made by the Income-tax Officer was set aside and a re-
assessment was directed to be made, the said periods of
limitation would not apply to such reassessment. Act 48 of
1948 introduced sub-s. (3) in s. 34 in substitution of sub-
s. (2) thereof. Under that sub-section the period of
limitation prescribed by sub-s. (2) was retained, and the
proviso to s. 34(2) before the amendment was made the
second. proviso, with some modifications, to the amended
sub-s. (3). While the scope of the previous proviso was
confined only to the completion of re-assessment
proceedings, the scope of the amended proviso is much wider
in that it exempts the subject-matter of that proviso from
the operation, of the period of limitation prescribed by the
section; that is to say, it gives full scope to the
operation of the substantive part of the section unhampered
by the periods of limitation prescribed by sub-ss. (1), (2)
and (3) of s. 34 of the Act. While the previous proviso
lifted the ban only in regard to the period of limitation
prescribed for the completion of the assessment, the new
proviso lifted the ban even in respect of the initiation of
proceedings under s. 34 (1) of the Act. It follows that if
a matter fell within the terms of the proviso, there would
be no period of limitation for initiating an action or
making an assessment or reassessment in respect of that
matter. Briefly stated, the said proviso is a proviso to
the entire s. 34. We shall consider the scope of the
proviso at a later stage of our judgment. Then came the
Finance Act of 1956. It amended s. 34 (1) and introduced a
proviso to the said sub-section, which we have noticed
earlier. That proviso, while removing the period of
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limitation in respect of concealed income, imposed
419
some conditions in respect thereof, but the four--year
period of limitation in respect of other escaped income was
retained. We are not concerned in this appeal with the
subsequent amendments.
The history of the section gives us the following background
to the proviso under consideration. Broadly stated, under
s. 34, as it existed in 1956, (i) there was no time limit
for initiating proceedings under s. 34(1) in respect of con-
cealed income, but such initiation could be made only sub-
ject to the conditions laid down in the proviso to s. 34(i);
(ii) in the case of other escaped income, the proceedings
could not be initiated after the expiry of 4 years from the
end of the relevant assessment year; (iii) the assessment
proceedings once commenced shall be completed within the
period of limitation prescribed under s. 34(3); and (iv) to
a case to which the proviso to s. 34(3) applies, there is no
period of limitation either for initiating the proceedings
under s. 34 or for completing the assessment commenced
either under s. 23 or under s. 34(1).
With this background let us give a closer look to the
relevant terms of the proviso. The first part of the
proviso released the operation of the proviso from the
restriction imposed by s. 34 only in respect of the time-
limit within which any action may be taken or any order of
assessment or re-assessment may by made. It means that the
proviso continues to be subject to the other restrictions
imposed under the section and it cannot override the said
provisions in that regard. Under the proviso, the period of
limitation will not apply to a re-assessment made under s.
27 or to an assessment or re-assessment made on the assessee
or any person in consequence of or to give effect to any
finding or direction contained in an order under s. 31, s.
33, s. 33B, s. 66 or s. 66A of the Act. It was not
contended, nor was it possible to contend, that by reason of
the reference to the said provisions the powers and
jurisdiction conferred on the respective. authorities,
tribunals or courts referred to therein were enlarged or
modified by a’ reference in the proviso or that the proviso
could be read or construed as amending those sections
conferring on those bodies wider or different powers or
jurisdiction. Learned counsel for the department expressly
disclaimed any such submission. Therefore, the
scope of the proviso cannot ordinarily exceed the scope of
the jurisdiction conferred on an authority under the said
provisions. It is not, and cannot be, disputed that under
the Income-Lax Act, year is the unit of assessment. The
Judicial Committee in Commissioner of Income-tax v. S. M.
Chitnavis(1) pointed out :
"For the purpose of computing the yearly
profits and gains, each year is a separate
self-contained period, time, in regard to
which profits earned or losses sustained
before its commencement are irrelevant."
This Court in Sir Kikabhai Premchand v. Commissioner of
Income-tax (Central), Bombay(1) accepted this legal position
when it said:
".......... for income-tax purposes, each
year is a self-contained accounting period and
we can only take into consideration income,
profits and gains made in that year and are
not concerned with potential profits which may
be made in. another year any -more than we are
with losses which may occur in the future."
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Indeed, the decision of an Income-tax Officer given in a
particular year does not operate as res judicata in the
matter of assessment of the subsequent years. The
jurisdiction of the tribunals in the hierarchy created by
the Act is no higher than that of the Income-tax Officer.
It is also confined to the year of assessment. Under s. 27
of the Act, the Incometax Officer cancels the best-judgment
assessments made by him if the assessee shows that he was
prevented by sufficient cause from making the returns under
s. 22 of the Act. Section 31 prescribes the mode of
disposal by an Assistant Appellate Commissioner of an appeal
preferred to him: the appeal before him is certainly
confined to an assessment year; after hearing the appeal, he
can either confirm, reduce, enhance or annul the assessment;
he can set aside the
(1)(1932) L. R. 59 I. A. 290. 297.
(2) [1954] S. C. R. 219, 222.
421
assessment and direct the Income-tax Officer to make a fresh
assessment. The various sub-sections of that section
describe in detail the orders or directions that can be made
or issued by him in respect of various matters; but, no
power is conferred on him to make an order or issue
directions in respect of an assessment of a year which was
not the subject-matter of the appeal. It may, therefore, be
held on a construction of the provisions of s. 31, that the
jurisdiction of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner is
strictly confined to the assessment orders of a particular
year under appeal. Section 33, inter alia, deals with an
appeal to the Tribunal against the order of the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner under s. 31; and s. 33B confers power
of revision on the Commissioner against an order of the
Income-tax Officer. The jurisdiction of the Appellate
Tribunal or the Revisional Tribunal, as the provisions
indicate, is confined only to the subject-matter which is
under appeal or revision. The jurisdiction of the High
Court or the Supreme Court under s. 66 or s. 66B, as the
case may be, is far more limited and it is confined only to
the questions referred to them. Obviously the questions
referred by the Tribunal cannot exceed its jurisdiction. It
is, therefore, manifest that assessment or re-assessmentmade
under the said sections or pursuant to the orders
ordirections made thereunder must necessarily relate to the
assessment of the year under review, revision or appeal,
as the case may be. It is important to remember that the
proviso does not confer any fresh power upon the Income-tax
Officer to make assessments in respect of escaped incomes
without any time-limit. It only lifts the ban of limitation
in respect of certain assessments made under certain
provisions of the Act and the lifting of the ban cannot be
so construed as to increase the jurisdiction of the
Tribunals under the relevant sections. The lifting of the
ban was only to give effect to the orders that may be made
by the appellate, revisional or reviewing tribunal within
the scope of its jurisdiction. If the intention was to
remove the period of limitation in respect of any assessment
against any person, the proviso would not have been added as
a proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34, which deals with
completion of an assessment, but would have been added to
sub-s. (1) thereof.
422
Now, let us scrutinize the expressions on which strong
reliance is placed for the contrary conclusion. The words
relied upon are "section limiting the time", ",any person",
"in consequence of or to give effect to any finding or
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direction". Pointing out that before the amendment the
word "subsection was in the proviso but it was replaced by
the expression "section", it is contended that this
particular amendment will be otiose if it is confined to the
assessment year under appeal, for it is said that under no
circumstances the Income-tax Officer would have to initiate
proceedings for the said year pursuant to an order made by
an Appellate Assistant Commissioner. This contention is
obviously untenable. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner
or the Appellate Tribunal may set aside the notice itself
for one reason or other and in that event the Income-tax
Officer may have to initiate the proceedings once again in
which case s. 34(1) will be attracted. The expression
"finding or direction", the argument proceeds, is wide
enough to take in at any rate a finding that is necessary to
dispose of the appeal or directions which Appellate
Assistant Commissioners have in practice been issuing in
respect of assessments of the years other than those before
them in appeal. What does the expression "finding" in the
proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34 of the Act mean? "Finding"
has not been defined in the Income-tax Act. Order XX, r. 5
of the Code of Civil Procedure reads:
"In suits in which issues have been framed,
the Court shall state its finding or decision,
with the reasons therefor, upon each separate
issue, unless the finding upon any one or more
of the issues is sufficient for the decision
of the suit."
Under this Order, a "finding" is, therefore, a decision on
an issue framed in a suit. The second part of the rule
shows that such a finding shall be one which by its own
force or in combination with findings on other issues should
lead to the decision of the suit itself. That is to say,
the finding shall be one which is necessary for the disposal
of the suit. The scope of the meaning of the expression
"finding" is considered by a Division Bench of the Allahabad
High Court in
423
Pt. Hazari Lal v. Income-tax Officer, Kanpur(1) There, the
learned Judges pointed out:
"The word "finding’, interpreted in the sense
indicated by us above, will only cover
material questions which arise in a particular
case for decision by the authority hearing the
case or the appeal which, being necessary for
passing the final order or giving the, final
decision in the appeal, has been the subject
of controversy between the interested parties
or on which the parties concerned have been
given a hearing."
We agree with this definition of "finding". But a Full
Bench of the same High Court in Lakshman Prakash v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, U.P. (2) construed the word
"finding" in a rather comprehensive way. Desai, C.J.,
speaking for the Court, observed:
"A finding is nothing but what one finds or
decides and a decision on a question even
though not absolutely necessary or not called
for is a finding."
If that be the correct meaning, any finding on an irrelevant
or extraneous matter would be a finding. That certainly
cannot be the intention of the Legislature. The Madras High
Court also in A. S. Khader Ismail v. Income-tax Officer,
Salem(3) gave a very wide interpretation to that word,
though it did not go so far as the Full Bench of the Allaha-
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bad High Court. Ramachandra Iyer J., as he then was,
speaking for the Court, observed that the word "finding" in
the proviso must be given a wide significance so as to
include not only findings necessary for the disposal of the
appeal but also findings which were incidental to it. With
respect, this interpretation also is inconsistent with the
well-known meaning of that expression in the legal
terminology. Indeed, learned counsel for the respondent
himself will not go so far, for he concedes that the
expression "finding" cannot be
(1) (196O) 39 I. T. R. 265, 272 (2) (1963) 48 I. T. R.
705, 718. (3) (1963) 48 I.T.R. 16.
424
any incidental finding, but says that it must be a
conclusion on a material question necessary for the disposal
of the appeal, though it need not necessarily conclude the
appeal. This concession does not materially differ from the
definition we have given, but the difference lies in the
application of that definition to the finding given in the
present case. A "finding", therefore, can be only that
which is necessary for the disposal of an appeal in respect
of an assessment of a particular year. The Appellate
Assistant Commissioner may hold, on the evidence, that the
income shown by the assessee is not the income for the
relevant year and thereby exclude that income from the
assessment of the year under appeal. The finding in that
context is that that income does not belong to the relevant
year. He may incidentally find that the income belongs to
another year, but that is not a finding necessary for the
disposal of an appeal in respect of the year of assessment
in question. The expression "direction" cannot be construed
in vacuum, but must be collated to the directions which the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner can give under s. 31.
Under that section he can give directions, inter alia, under
s. 31 (3) (b), (c) or (e) or s. 31 (4). The expression
"directions" in the proviso could only refer to the
directions which the Appellate Assistant Commissioner or
other tribunals can issue under the powers conferred on him
or them under the respective sections. Therefore, the ex-
pression "finding" as well as the expression "direction" can
be given full meaning, namely, that the finding is a finding
necessary for giving relief in respect of the assessment of
the year in question and the direction is a direction which
the appellate or revisional authority, as the case may be,
is, empowered to give under the sections mentioned therein.
The words "in consequence of or to give effect to" do not
create any difficulty, for they have to be collated with,
and cannot enlarge, the scope of the finding or direction
under the proviso. If the scope is limited as aforesaid,
the said words also must be related to the scope of the
findings and directions.
The words "any person’, it is said, conclude the matter in
favour of the Department. The expression "any person"in its
widest connotation may take in any person whether connected
or not with the assessee, whose income for any
425
year has escaped assessment; but this construction cannot be
accepted, for the said expression is necessarily
Circumscribed by the scope of the subject-matter of the
appeal or revision, as the case may be. That is to say,
that person must be one who would be liable to be assessed
for the whole or a part of the income that went into the
assesment of the year under appeal or revision. If so
construed, we must turn to s. 31 to ascertain who is that
person other than the appealing assessee who can be liable
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to be assessed for the income of the said assessment year.
A combined -eading of s. 30(1) and s. 31(3) of the Act
indicates the cases where persons other than the appealing
assessees might be affected by orders passed by the
Appellate Commissioner. Modification or setting aside of
assessment made on a firm, joint Hindu family, association
of persons, for a particular year may affect the assessment
for the said year on a partner or partners of the firm,
member or members of the Hindu undivided family or the
individual, as the case may be. lit such cases though the
latter are not eo nomine parties to the appeal, their
assessments depend upon the assessments on the former. The
said instances are only illustrative. It is not necessary
to pursue the matter further. We would, therefore, hold
that the expression "any person" in the setting in which it
appears must be confined to a person intimately connected in
the aforesaid sense with the assessment of the year under
appeal.
We shall now briefly touch upon the conflict of decisions on
the question. The Full Bench of the Allahabad’ High Court
in Lakshman Prakash’s case(1) overruled the decision of the
Division Bench in Pt. Hazari Lal’s case (2). A Division
Bench of the Madras High Court consisting of Rajagopalan and
Balakrishna Ayyar JJ., in Simrathmull v. Additional Income-
tax Officer, Ootacamund(3), took the same view as the Full
Bench of the Allahabad High Court in Lakshman Prakash’s
case(4). But a Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court,
consisting of Bose C.J., and Mookerjee J., in Brindaban
Chandra Basak v. Income-tax Officer(4), though it had not
finally expressed any opinion
(1) [1963] 48 I.T.R. 705, 718.
(2) [1960] 39 I.T.R. 265, 272.
(3) (1959) 36 I. T. R. 41.
(4) (1962) 46 I. T. R. 14.
426
on that, was inclined to accept the view expressed by the
Division Bench of the Allahabad High Court in Pt. Hazari
Lal’s case(1). We have gone through the decisions
carefully. For the reasons given by us, we agree with the
view expressed by the Division Bench of the Allahabad High
Court in Pt. Hazari Lal’s case(2) on the interpretation of
the proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34 of the Act.
In the result, we hold that the said provision would not
save the time-limit prescribed under sub-s’ (1) of s. 34 of
the Act in respect of an escaped assessment of a year other
than that which is the subject-matter of the appeal or the
revision, as the case may be. It follows that the notice
under s. 34(1) (a) of the Act issued in the present case was
clearly barred by limitation.
In this view no other question arises for our consideration.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
MUDHOLKAR J.-This is an appeal by special leave from the
judgment of the Allahabad High Court in the writ petition
under Art. 226 of the Constitution quashing a notice under
s. 34(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 issued by the
appellant, Income-tax Officer, A Ward Sitapur on December 5,
1957 against respondent No. 4.
The relevant facts are briefly these:
For the assessment year 1949-50, correspondiria to Samvat
year 2005, the appellant made an ex-parte assessment under
s. 23(4) of the Act on November 13, 1953 which he later set
aside under s. 27 of the Act. Before that he had issued a
notice to the respondent firm under s. 314(1) (a) of the Act
in respect of the same assessment year on the ground that a
sum of Rs. 88,737 representing interest alleged to have been
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earned by the firm during that year had escaped assessment
in the assessment made under s. 23(14). After, however,
fresh proceedings were taken under s. 23 (3) by the
appellant consequent upon his order under s. 27, he
proceeded to include in the assessment a sum of Rs. 88,737
which was alleged to have escaped assessment in the notice
earlier issued under s. 34(1) (a) and made an assessment
(1) (1963)48I.T.R.705,718.
427
order on January 31, 1957. Against this order the respon-
dent preferred an appeal before the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner in which he urged two main grounds and the one
accepted by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner was that
the aforesaid amount of interest was received by the firm in
the accounting period of the previous assessment year and
not in that of the assessment year 1949-50. Upon this view,
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner reduced the assessment
and observed as follows in his order :
"I, therefore, hold that the amount in dispute
should be deleted from the assessment for
1949-50 and that, instead, the Income-tax
Officer should take steps to assess the wnount
for the assessment year 1948-49."
Treating this as a direction or finding of the Appellate
Authority, the appellant issued the impugned notice dated
December 5, 1957 under s. 34(1) (a). The respondent
immediately moved the High Court for quashing the aforesaid
notice. The High Court quashed the notice on the ground
that it was issued by the appellant beyond the ordinary
period of limitation, overruling the appellant’s
contention that no period of limitation governed the notice
inas- much as the second proviso to s. 34(3) of the Act was
attracted to the facts of the case. The High Court in doing
so purported to follow its own decision in Pt. Hazari Lal
v. The Income-tax Officer, Disti. II, Kanpur(1). Briefly
stated, the view taken by the High Court is that the only
direction which the Appellate Assistant Commissioner can
competently give is one which is covered by s. 31 of the Act
and that since the appeal before him was confined to a
particular assessment year, the direction must also be
necessarily limited to a matter falling within that year.
The High Court further held that if the direction be treated
as based on a finding recorded by the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner, that finding will have to be disregarded when
applying the proviso. The correctness of the view taken by
the High Court is challenged before us on behalf of the
appellant.
(1) Civil Misc. Writ. 2227 of 1956.
428
The relevant part of s. 34(3) and the second proviso thereto
run thus:
"No order of assessment or reassessment, other
than an order of assessment under s. 23 to
which clause (c) of sub-section (1) of section
28 applies or an order of assessment or
reassessment in cases falling within clause
(a) of subsection (1) or sub-section (1A) of
this section shall be made after the expiry of
four years from the end of the year in which
the income, profits or gains were first
assessable:
Provided further that nothing contained in this section
limiting the time within which any action may be taken or
any order, assessment or reassessment may be made shall
apply to a reassessment made under section 27 or to an
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assessment or reassessment made on the assessee or any per-
son in consequence of or to give effect to any finding or
direction contained in an order under section 31, section
33, section 33A, section 33B, section 66 or section 66A."
This is how the provision stands as from April 1, 1956 and
it is not disputed before us that it is the amended
provision which would apply to the present case. What is,
however, contended on behalf of the respondent is that the
only issue before an Income-tax Officer in every case being
the assessment for a particular year and no other year, the
direction or finding contemplated by the second proviso
which the Appellate Authority could make must necessarily be
limited to that year alone. The alternative contention is
that if the second proviso is so construed as to permit of a
direction or finding being made with respect to any other
year, it is ultra vires being violative of Art. 14 of the
Constitution. - It was further contended that since the
amount in this case is below one lakh of rupees, the second
proviso will not apply.
As regards the last point we may advert to our judgment
delivered today in K. C. Thomas, First Income-tax Officer,
Bombay v. Vasant Hiralal Shah(1) in which we have
(1) [1964] 6 S.C.R. 437.
429
negatived a similar contention. For the reasons given
there, we reject the argument of learned counsel for the
respondent.
Coming to the first contention of the respondent, it is no
doubt true that the whole scheme of the Income-tax Act is to
confine the assessment pursuant to the notice given under s.
22 to a particular year and particular year alone and in the
proceeding before him he is bound to confine himself to the
income of that year. If income in previous years has
escaped assessment, he has no power to bring it to
assessment along with the income of a subsequent year. The
only power which he has for bringing such income to
assessment is to resort to the provisions of s. 34(1) and
issue a separate notice with respect to it to the assessee
and the Appellate Assistant Commissioner of Income-tax hear-
ing an appeal from an order of assessment made by the
Income-tax Officer is in no better position in this matter
than the Income-tax Officer. All that is perfectly true.
But the question which we have to consider is whether the
wide language employed by the legislature in enacting the
second proviso should not be given its natural meaning.
This proviso removes the bar of limitation enacted by s.
34(1) and its first two provisos not only with respect to
the assessee but with respect to "any person" in certain
circumstances. No doubt, this Court has recently held in S.
C. Prashar & Anr. v. Vasantsen Dwarkadas & ors.(1) that the
proviso in so far as it removes the bar of limitation with
respect to persons other than the assessee, is invalid as it
infringes the provisions of Art. 14 of the Constitution.
That, however, is a question apart. What we have to
consider is the legislative intent, and for ascertaining it,
it is legitimate to look also at that part of the enactment
which has been held to be invalid. By permitting the
Appellate Authority to make a finding or give a direction
with respect to a person other than the assessee the
Legislature has made it abundantly clear that for bringing
escaped income to assessment the bar ,of limitation would
not apply provided there is a finding or direction of the
Appellate Authority that a particular item ,of income had
escaped assessment and may, therefore, be brought to
assessment. Under the operative portion of s. 34(1), the
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Income-tax Officer is empowered to give notice
(1) [1964] 1 S.C.R. 29.
430
to an assessee in respect of escaped -assessment. He can
issue such notice under cl. (a) thereof where income has
escaped assessment due to any conduct on the part of the
assessee and in such a case he can issue a notice at any
time. Certain restrictions, however, have been placed upon
his power by the first proviso to sub-s. (1) of s. 34, one
of which is the period of limitation of eight years with
respect to income of less than a lakh of rupees. The second
proviso to sub-s. (3) is a proviso to the whole of s. 34 and
would consequently apply to a case falling under s. 34(1)
(a). The restrictions placed by the enacting provisions of
s. 34(3) would not, as made clear in the second proviso,
apply to such a case. Thus, the proviso in terms says that
when a notice is issued under s. 34(1) (a), no question of
limitation would arise when such notice is issued in
pursuance of a direction or finding of an appellate
authority. Since the proceeding in pursuance of a notice
under s. 34 is necessarily independent of the assessment
proceedings under s. 22 with respect to a particular year,
the proviso in question need not be so interpreted as to be
limited to a direction made by the Appellate Authority while
dealing with an appeal for that particular year. The fact
that certain income has escaped assessment may come to the
notice of an Appellate Authority in any case and it clearly
appears to be the intention of the Legislature to require an
Income-tax Officer to take cognizance of it in the
circumstances stated in the proviso.
It is, however, contended that the power of the Appellate
Authority to make a direction or finding in any appeal be-
fore it is confined to matters specified in s. 31 and that
upon a proper construction of that provision, a direction or
finding with respect to income of any particular year other
than the one with respect to which there is an appeal before
it, cannot be competently made by the Appellate Authority.
In support of this contention reliance is placed up on the
decisions in Kamlapat Motilal v. Income-tax Officer and
anr.(1), Hiralal Amritlal Shah v. K. C. Thomas, Income-tax
Officer, Bombay (2) ; Pt. Hazari Lal v. Income-tax Officer,
Dist. II Kanpur(3); Brindaban Chandra Basak v. Income-tax
(1) (1956) 29 I. T. R. 192. (2) (1958) 34 I. T. R. 446.
(3) (196O) 39 I. T. R. 265.
431
Officer(1). In the first of these cases the learned
judges have observed :
"In our opinion the powers of the Appellate
Tribunal under section 3 3 (4) are limited to
the passing of such order as it thinks fit to
make in the proceedings which are then before
it on appeal, and in our judgment it has no
power under this section to pass an order or
give directions with reference to the
proceedings of an earlier year which are
concluded."
We may point out that s. 33 (4) only refers to a finding or
direction made by an Appellate Authority and does not itself
confer any power on an Appellate Authority to make a finding
or direction. Indeed, s. 34 deals with entirely a different
aspect, that of empowering an Income-tax Officer to bring to
assessment escaped income, and ha(; no concern with the
powers of an Appellate Authority. The provisions which
deals with the powers of an Appellate Authority is s. 31 and
it is with that provision that we must concern ourselves
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primarily. The next case is not strictly relevant to this
point. But the third one which is again a decision of the
Allahabad High Court has proceeded to construe s. 31 of the
Act and we, therefore, have to consider it. After observing
that the scope of the orders which can be passed by the
Appellate Authority under s. 31 the learned Judges have
observed:
"The very fact that the Appellate Assistant Commissioner of
Income-tax, when making an order under section 31, is
dealing with an appeal filed by an assessee in respect of an
assessment order indicates the scope of his jurisdiction to
give findings and to make consequential orders: The various
orders, which an Appellate Assistant Commissioner of Income-
tax can make, are detailed in section 31(3) though there is
no detailed provision about the findings which he can
record. It appears to us, however, that,
(1) (1962) 46 I. T. R. 14.
432
from the very nature of the jurisdiction which an Appellate
Assistant Commissioner of Incometax exercises, it must
follow that his power of recording findings is limited to
matters which he is called upon to decide when passing an
order in appeal in conformity with the details laid down in
section 31(3). Any order passed by him, which is beyond the
scope of section 31(3), would be an order without
jurisdiction and, similarly, any finding recorded by him,
which is not necessary for the purpose of making an order
covered by s. 31(3), would be a finding without
jurisdiction. Further’ when applying the second proviso to
section 34(3) of the Income-tax Act, the Income-tax Officer
is only competent to take into account orders which are in
conformity with the provisions of section 31(3) and findings
which are necessary for passing those orders. Orders, which
are outside the scope of section 31(3) or findings which are
not at all necessary for making such orders, cannot be taken
into account by the Income-tax Officer for the purpose of
relying on the second proviso to section 34(3) which we are
now considering." (p. 271) -
The learned Judges have proceeded to hold that the word
"finding" must be given the same meaning as that in the Code
of Civil Procedure, that is. a decision of the Court. In
other words, they seem to hold that a finding means only the
final conclusion in the case. In support of this conclusion
they placed reliance upon S. C. Prashar v. Vasantsen
Dwarkadas(1).
Section 31(3) of the Act confers certain express powers upon
the Appellate Authority, one of which is to ’confirm.
reduce, enhance or annul the assessment. This power can be
exercised only after the Appellate Authority arrives at some
conclusions on facts. Thus, if an assessee wants to be
exonerated from tax with respect to a particular item of
(1) (1956) 2 I. T. R 857
433
income and sets out the grounds on which he bases his claim
for exoneration the Appellate Authority has to consider them
and arrive at its findings with regard to them before it can
reduce or annul the assessment. It would follow, therefore,
that the power to confirm, reduce, enhance or annul an
assessment is implicit in the power of giving findings on
the grounds on which a claim is made for one or the other of
these results by the department or the assesee. No express
mention of such power was required in s. 31(3). When an
appeal is before an Appellate Authority the whole matter is
at large before it and, therefore, when a, specific case is
put before it by an assessee it has both the power as well
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as the duty to give its finding thereon. The ground given
by the assessee for claiming a reduction or annulment of
assessment may well be that the income upon which he has
been assessed was not earned in the accounting period of the
year to which the assessment pertains but in respect of a
specified earlier or later year. The Appellate Authority is
entitled to go into the whole question and come to a finding
one way ’or the other, whether the income was earned in the
year in which it was alleged by the assessee to have been
earned or in the year with respect to which he has been
assessed by the Income-tax Officer. To give a finding on
this question would be obligatory upon the Appellate
Authority and his duty to give a finding must necessarily be
referable to the provisions of s. 31(3). We cannot accept
the view of the Allahabad High Court that the word "finding"
occurring in s. 34(3) is susceptible of only one meaning,
and that is that ascertainable from the Code of Civil
Procedure. The finding of a tribunal is its conclusion on a
point agitated before it and for a conclusion to amount to a
finding it is not necessary that it should be the final and
ultimate conclusion. We are, therefore, unable to accept
the view taken by the Allahabad High Court. The last
mentioned case does not decide the matter finally. But
there the learned Judges have expressed a preference for the
view taken by the Allahabad High Court as against that taken
by the Madras High Court in K. Simrathmull v. Additional
Income-tax Officer, Ootacamund(1). In that case a similar
argument to that urged before us and before the
(1)(1959) 36 I. T R. 41.
134-159 S. C.28.
434
Allahabad High Court was advanced. Dealing with it the
learned Judges have observed:
"To support this argument no authority was
cited and it appear to us to be completely
untenable. When an assessment is made and
either the Department or the assessee appeals,
the whole matter would be before the Assistant
Commissioner, and, no express provision would
be necessary to enable him to give directions
in respect of a matter already before him.
This would apply also to the Commissioner and
the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal." (p. 47)
They then explained the reason for an express provision like
the one contained in s. 34(3) by saying that it was
necessary to have such provision so as to enable the Income-
tax Officer to take action in pursuance of a finding
recorded or direction given by an Apellate Authority.
Finally they observed:
"To construe the proviso in the manner in
which Mr. Subbarya Aiyar invited us to do
would be to make that proviso otiose."
With these observations we concur. This decision has been
followed by the Bombay High Court in, General Construction
and Supply Co., v. Income-tax Officer (8th) C. Ward,
Bombay(1).
The same High Court has reaffirmed the view taken in
Simrathmull’s case(1) in A. S. Khader Ismail v. Income-tax
Officer, Salem(2) and held that the word "finding" in the
proviso to s. 34(3) must be given a wide significance so as
to include not only findings necessary for the disposal of
the appeal but also findings which are incidental to it and
would include its conclusion as to whether the income in
question in the appeal was not received during the, year to
which the appeal relates. Upon this view the High Court
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held that if in pursuance of such a finding, the Income-tax
Officer proceeds to investigate afresh as to in which year
the income was received, the action of the Income-,ax
Officer
(1) (1962) 44 I. T. R. 16.
(2) (1959) 36 I. T. R. 41.
(3) (1963) 47 I. T. R. 16.
435
would still be the result of or the logical consequence of
the finding arrived at for the purpose of the disposal of
the appeal and the proviso to s. 34(3) would apply to such a
case. The view taken by the High Court is in our judgment
correct.
Thus in our view upon a construction of the relevant
provisions we have no doubt that the notice was not in
contravention of the provisions of s. 34 of the Income-tax
Act and could not be quashed on that ground.
The question then remains whether the second proviso below
s. 34(3) is bad as offending Art. 14 of the Constitution.
In support of this contention reliance is placed by Mr.
Bishan Narain for the respondent on the decisions of this
Court in Suraj Mall Mohata & Co. v. A. V. Visvanatha Sastri
& anr. (1) and S. C. Prashar & anr. v. Vasantsen Dwarkadas &
ors. (2). In the first case it was held that both s. 34 of
the Income-tax Act and sub-s. (4) of s. 5 of the Taxation on
Income (Investigation Commission) Act, 1947, deal with all
persons who have similar characteristics and similar
properties, that the procedure prescribed in the later Act
is substantially more prejudicial and more drastic to the
assessee than the procedure under the former Act and that,
therefore, sub-s. (4) of s. 5 of the former Act in so far as
it affects the persons proceeded against thereunder is void
as offending the provisions of Art. 14 of the Constitution.
On the analogy of this case learned counsel contends that
the second proviso to s. 34(3) enabling a notice to issue
only to an assessee in respect of escaped income without
limit of time on the ground that an Appellate Authority has
made a finding or direction in the proceeding before it
makes a discrimination against such an assessee because it
does not lift the bar of limitation with regard to other
assessees, similarly situate, but with regard to whom no
finding has been made or direction given by an Appellate
Authority. No doubt, persons whose income have escaped
assessment, and the fact that they have escaped assessment
has not been discovered till after the lapse of eight years
from the year in which they could have been assessed to tax
on such
(1) [1955] 1 S. C. R. 448. (2) [1964] I S. C. R. 29.
436
income, can be placed in one class. But surely it does not
follow that even in that class there can be no further
classification. The legislature in enacting the particular
provision has made a further or a sub-classification by
puttinunder one head those whose assessments have come up
for scrutiny before an Appellate Authority and with respect
to whose escaped assessment a judicial finding or direction
is made by the Appellate Authority and under another head
other assessees whose escaped income was not detected by the
Appellate Authority and with respect to which no judicial
finding or -direction was, therefore, made by such
authority. There is a real difference between the two
categories of assessees. Prima facie there is reasonable
basis for the sub-classification and the grounds on which it
is made, that is, discovery by a higher Income-tax Authority
and a judicial finding or direction made with respect to the
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fact by it. These grounds have a rational relationship with
the object which was intended to be achieved by the law.
that is. to detect and brine to assessment the escaped
income. (See for example A. Thangal Kunju Musaliar v. M.
Venkitachalam Potti & anr. (1) where a further
classification of war porfiteers into those who had evaded
substantial amount of income-tax and those whose evasion was
not of a substantial amount was upheld.) We can find nothing
in the decision upon which reliance is placed which runs
counter to our view. On the other hand we find ample
support from the decision in Balaji v. Income. tax Officer,
Special Investigation Circle (2) where it has been pointed
out that the two tests of permissible classification under
Art. 14 are (a) that the classification must be founded on
an intelligible differentia and (b) that the differentia
must be reasonably connected with the object of the legisla-
tion, and that where they are satisfied by a statute. it
does not violate Art. 14 of the Constitution. As regards
the other decision relied upon, it is sufficient to point
out that the majority of the learned Judges have only struck
down that part of the proviso which enables a notice to
issue "to any person" on the ground that it is violative of
Art. 14. The precise question which we have before us does
not appear to have been the subject of decision in that
case. We
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1196. (2) [1962] 2 S.C.R. 983
437
are, therefore, unable to accept the contention of learned
counsel.
For the foregoing reasons we allow the appeal and quash the
writ of certiorari issued by the High Court. It may be
mentioned that in the absence of a stay of proceedings by
the High Court the Income-tax Officer has actually made an
assessment in pursuance of the impugned notice.
That assessment willstand unless it is modified or annulled
in any proceeding permitted by law. Costs of the appeal and
the petition before the High Court will be borne by the
respondent.
ORDER BY COURT
In view of the judgment of the majority, the appeal fails
and is dismissed with costs.